Study of Cytokines in Children With Opsoclonus-Myoclonus Syndrome (OMS)

This study has been completed.

Sponsor:

National Pediatric Neuroinflammation Organization, Inc.

ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:

NCT00806182

First Posted: December 10, 2008

Last Update Posted: May 23, 2017

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The purpose of this study is to determine if cytokines, inflammatory mediators, are increased in spinal fluid and blood, correlate with disease activity, and could serve as biomarkers or therapeutic targets in children with opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome (OMS), an autoimmune complication of the tumor neuroblastoma.

These are children who underwent lumbar puncture and blood drawing for diagnostic testing for non-inflammatory neurological or non-neurological disorders, and whose samples were retrieved from the clinical lab under a linked Institutional Review Board (IRB) protocol.

Pediatric OMS

These are patients treated by the P.I. based on clinical decision making, not a clinical trial (this is an observational study). The types of treatments are varied, and, on the initial evaluation, the patients may be untreated or already tried on various immunotherapies. They range from monotherapy with steroids, ACTH, or IVIg, to disease modifying agents, such as rituximab, cyclophosphamide, and other chemotherapy, typically adjunctively or as combination therapy.

Detailed Description:

In this translational research, immunological mechanisms that underlie the assault of the immune system on the brain in paraneoplastic opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome (OMS) are under evaluation. To test our principal hypothesis that there is an imbalance of pro-inflammatory (Th1) and anti-inflammatory (Th2) cytokines in OMS, a comprehensive cytokine panel will be measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and multiplexed fluorescent bead-based immunoassay detection (LUMINEX 100 Lab MAP system)in blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of 400 children. To test the second hypothesis that cytokines could serve as biomarkers of disease activity in OMS, cytokine concentrations will be correlated with clinical variables, such as disease severity, OMS duration, prior relapses, and remissions, as well as immunological variables, such as lymphocyte subset analysis. The cytokine 'biomarker profile' could aid decision making for early intervention by identifying children at high risk for relapse and poor outcome and allow targeting of the most implicated inflammatory cytokines by cytokine therapies. To test our third hypothesis that lack of response to immunotherapy is due in part to failure to increase the expression of anti-inflammatory Th2 cytokines, we will make paired pre/post comparisons of the impact of immunotherapies given in the course of clinical care [steroids, adrenocorticotropin (ACTH), intravenous immunoglobulins (IVIg), rituximab, chemotherapy, other drugs, combinations] on the cytokine and clinical profile. This research could lead to the application of commercially-available cytokines and cytokine blockers or to the development of new ones for OMS.

Eligibility

Information from the National Library of Medicine

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